Korea Developing a ‘Mobile Paradise'
Korea Developing a ‘Mobile Paradise'
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  • 승인 2006.04.01 12:01
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The Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC) plans to build a "mobile special district," called a Mobile Paradise, this year, where people will be able to enjoy seamless service from the world's latest wireless technologies. The ministry revealed the ambitious plan on Feb. 8, dubbed the M1 (Mobile No. 1) project, as part of its annual business plan for 2006. It will also actively push for u-IT839 strategy in earnest this year to achieve 576 trillion won ($587 billion) in production and 26.6 trillion won ($271 billion) in value added until 2010. Under the M1 project, all existing and burgeoning mobile technologies worldwide will be used in the special district, which will be designated later, an MIC spokesman said. The special district will be a kind of free technology zone that will create a new mobile environment. It will play the role of test-bed for up-and-coming wireless platforms, he added. Included in the available techniques will be all mobile broadcasting systems like DVB-H developed by Nokia, Qualcomm's MediaFlo and the home-grown digital multimedia broadcasting. In addition, citizens there will be free to use every nextgeneration telecom platform such as time division-synchronous code division multiple access (TD-SCDMA), WiBro and a global system for mobile communications (GSM). Most of the aforementioned platforms have been unavailable in Korea, where CDMA technology was the mainstream system for wireless communications. The nation became a global mobile behemoth thanks to its relentless pursuit of CDMA, the single national standard, over the past decade. Hereafter, the M1 project will be sure to pave the way for a second-phased growth, the official said Under the ambitious scheme, the ministry aims at achieving 100-percent mobile literacy here as well as substantially expanding the country's presence in the global market. The ministry is seeking to supply roughly 30 percent of the global market for mobile terminals and approximately half of the components market by 2010, he noted. Besides the mobile special district venture, the MIC decided to upgrade its growth strategy. In 2004, the ministry phased in a new growth tactic of nurturing eight new services, three infrastructures and nine hardware-related businesses under the title IT839. Then, it streamlined the long-term plan, rearranging its portfolio _ adding new prominent growth phases like IT services and radio tags to the lineup _ and re-titled the plan u-IT839 This new project will enable us to crank out products worth 576 trillion won by 2010 and create additional value of 266 trillion won by the cited period, he said. The MIC is also striving to counter side effects caused by fast-developing high-tech fields. Toward that end, the ministry earmarked 43.7 billion won for this year to bridge the widening digital divide, or gaps between information ''haves'' and ''have-nots.'' The budget will be funneled into such tasks as educating the old, the disabled or North Korean defectors in the latest information technology (IT) and mandating the construction of the high-speed Internet network in rural areas where more than 30 households are located. In addition, the ministry reaffirmed its promise to start the Internet real-name system this year to help prevent cyber crime such as libel. In the first phase, those who post messages on large Web portal sites will be obliged to use their real names instead of pseudonyms this year. Some critics contend that the real name format will irritate ordinary Web users while failing to catch elusive Internet criminals. They also argue the plan violates constitutional rights on free speech. But a majority of Koreans have sided with the real-name formula as unscrupulous persons continue to commit crimes in the virtual world, hiding in their anonymity. Apart from this, the ministry plans to expand the scope of the regions to enjoy terrestrial DMB to almost all places in the country.

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